Draw on the cards as Rawalpindi weather caps second day at 18.2 overs
In the little play that was possible, Pakistan availed the second new ball, and Shaheen Shah Afridi broke through within five overs, inducing the outside edge from Niroshan Dickwella, who kept fishing at balls outside off until he was caught at gully after being manipulated by the angle across him.
The passage before the second new ball was taken was largely dealt with easily by Dickwella and Dhananjaya de Silva, who extended their sixth-wicket partnership to 67. Pakistan’s bowlers largely bowled straight lines, but with little to no movement in the air or off the deck, Dickwella and de Silva negotiated them with crisp strokes, largely presenting a straight bat.
Stumps in Rawalpindi.
— ICC (@ICC) December 12, 2019
There's been little action today due to the weather - Sri Lanka lost one wicket and will begin day three on 263/6. #PAKvSL SCORECARD 👉 https://t.co/CKfg2Y3ATf pic.twitter.com/w1wzkkBX5U
This, even as the drizzle began five overs into the day, and the light meter came out two overs later. One over after recording the opening reading for the day, the players made way for the covers, as the ground remained under wraps for close to three-and-a-half hours.
It took three rounds of inspection from the umpires before play eventually resumed at 1:45pm local time, in what was supposed to be an extended second session of two hours and 15 minutes. Barely a third of that allotted time had passed when the players trudged off, this time for good, as the umpires deemed the light to be too bad for Sri Lanka’s batsmen to deal with a fiery new ball spell from Afridi.